The AMD A4-9125 SoC was a mobile processor with 2 cores, launched in April 2017. It is part of the A4 lineup, using the Stoney Ridge architecture with Socket FT4. A4-9125 SoC has 1 MB of L2 cache and operates at 2.3 GHz by default, but can boost up to 2.6 GHz, depending on the workload. AMD is making the A4-9125 SoC on a 28 nm production node using 1,200 million transistors. The silicon die of the chip is not fabricated at AMD, but at the foundry of GlobalFoundries. The multiplier is locked on A4-9125 SoC, which limits its overclocking potential. With a TDP of 15 W, the A4-9125 SoC consumes very little energy. AMD's processor supports DDR4 memory with a single-channel interface. The highest officially supported memory speed is 2133 MT/s, but with overclocking (and the right memory modules) you can go even higher. For communication with other components in the computer, A4-9125 SoC uses a PCI-Express Gen 3 connection. This processor features the Radeon R3 2CU integrated graphics solution. Hardware virtualization is available on the A4-9125 SoC, which greatly improves virtual machine performance. Programs using Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX) can run on this processor, boosting performance for calculation-heavy applications. Besides AVX, AMD is including the newer AVX2 standard, too, but not AVX-512.